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> Get Articles > Internet Marketing > 4 Steps to Gracefully Exit an MLM

4 Steps to Gracefully Exit an MLM


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Clay Mabbitt
cmabbittaffiliatescreen.com

AffiliateScreen.com
http://www.affiliatescreen.com


There comes a time in every affiliate career, when it

no longer benefits you to continue participating in a

plan. The reasons could include poor management,

changes in the product line, or any of a host of other

factors that reduce the quality of the program.



It may be tempting to simply stop promoting the

program and put an unsatisfying experience behind you,

but there is a lot to be gained by making a graceful

exit.



1. Contact the managers of the program.

The first thing to do is to get in touch with the

managers of the program. They are doubtless very

busy, but at the very least they should be able to

respond to you in email if you have a genuine

grievance with the program. In the best cases, the

managers will be able to shed new light on the

problems you see, and you might decide to stick with

it. If you give the managers a chance to make amends,

you might be surprised. In the event that the

managers ignore you or cannot satisfy your concerns,

continue with the steps below.



2. Contact your upline.

Hopefully you are already in regular contact with

someone in your upline, but particularly in Internet-

based affiliate programs this is not always the case.

If the managers were unable to make things right, it

is unlikely that your direct sponsor or anyone above

will be able to either. Notifying your upline is more

of a courtesy to explain why you are leaving. They

may pour more money into retention marketing as their

downline shrinks, if they don’t realize that people

are leaving because the program has fundamental flaws.



3. Cancel any credit card or PayPal subscriptions.

Many programs automatically withdrawal a monthly fee

from your credit card or PayPal account. If the

program is going well, this convenience can save you

the trouble of losing your downline when you forget to

make a payment. When it’s time to get out, however,

such subscriptions should be canceled immediately. If

the program has a process for ending your

subscription, you should certainly start there.

Perhaps you are leaving the program because you

suspect the program managers are unscrupulous or just

incompetent. In either case, it’s well worth the

piece of mind to contact your credit card (or PayPal)

directly to cancel the subscription. PayPal allows

you to do this on their web site, and most credit

cards subscriptions can be canceled with a 5-minute

phone call.



4. Contact your downline.

Here are the people that joined the program based on

your recommendation. If you’ve discovered the program

is not what you originally presented to them, you have

an obligation to share what you’ve learned with them.

If you can develop a reputation with these people as

someone whose opinion they can trust. By leaving your

current program, you illustrate that you have high

standards that not every program can meet. When you

share with them why you are leaving the program, you

are looking out for them, and they will be more

inclined to join you in your next affiliate program.

(Obviously this trust can be abused. If you

continually jerk them around from program to program,

they will quickly lose interest in sticking with you.)





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